Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 21, No. 27.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/humanities/cch/research/publications/humanist.html
www.princeton.edu/humanist/
Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu
[1] From: Bonnie Wilson <bwilson_at_cnri.reston.va.us> (29)
Subject: The May/June 2007 issue of D-Lib Magazine is now
available.
[2] From: ubiquity <ubiquity_at_HQ.ACM.ORG> (15)
Subject: Ubiquity8.19
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 16 May 2007 08:02:19 +0100
From: Bonnie Wilson <bwilson_at_cnri.reston.va.us>
Subject: The May/June 2007 issue of D-Lib Magazine is now available.
Greetings:
The May/June 2007 issue of D-Lib Magazine (http://www.dlib.org/) is
now available.
This issue contains seven articles, an opinion piece, the 'In Brief'
column, excerpts from recent press releases, and news of upcoming
conferences and other items of interest in 'Clips and
Pointers'. This month, D-Lib features "Harvard University's Library
Collections to the World" contributed by Peter Kosewski, Harvard University.
The opinion piece is:
A Challenge for the Library Acquisition Budget
Arthur Sale, University of Tasmania
The articles include:
Digital Preservation Service Provider Models for Institutional
Repositories: Towards Distributed Services
Steve Hitchcock, Tim Brody, Jessie M.N. Hey, and Leslie Carr,
University of Southampton
Creating the Next Generation of Archival Finding Aids
Elizabeth Yakel, Seth Shaw, and Polly Reynolds, University of Michigan
Large Scale Digitization of Oral History: A Case Study
Eric Weig, Kopana Terry, and Kathryn Lybarger, University of Kentucky
Type-consistent Digital Objects
Kostas Saidis and Alex Delis, University of Athens
Ten Major Issues in Providing a Repository Service in Australian Universities
Margaret Henty, Australian Partnership for Sustainable Repositories
Using Wikipedia to Extend Digital Collections
Ann M. Lally and Carolyn E. Dunford, University of Washington
Tea for Two: Bringing Informal Communication to Repositories
Ana Alice Baptista and Miguel Ferreira, University of Minho
[...]
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 16 May 2007 08:04:19 +0100
From: ubiquity <ubiquity_at_HQ.ACM.ORG>
Subject: Ubiquity8.19
This Week in Ubiquity:
Volume 8, Issue 19
May 15, 2007 =96 May 21, 2007
UBIQUITY ALERT: CODE AND COMPOSITION
Luke Fernandez's "Code and Composition"=20
compares the activity of programming computers=20
with the activity of writing. The essay=20
delineates the commonalities and differences in=20
these activities in the context of larger=20
technical and literary divisions that exist within the university.
Fernandez is at Weber State University, where he manages technology studies.
See:=20
<http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v8i19_fernandez.html>http<http://www.acm.=
org/ubiquity/views/v8i19_fernandez.html>://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v8i19_=
fernandez.html
Received on Wed May 16 2007 - 03:19:39 EDT
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